❀✿ The Rulebook includes the following 37 games ✿❀

Capture Games are the most popular Hanafuda games. Capture games involve capturing cards from a field and creating yaku (special combinations of cards) to score points.

Simplified Game for Beginners (Absolute Beginner, 2-4 players)

Matching Flowers (Beginner, 2-3 players)

Hana-Awase 1 (Beginner, 3-4 players)

Hana-Awase 2 (Beginner, 3 players)

Mushi (Beginner, 2 players)

Six Hundred (Beginner, 2-3 players)

Hachi-juu Hana (Beginner, 2-3 players)

Min-Hwatu (Intermediate, 2-3 players)

Koi-Koi (Intermediate, 2 players)

Oni Koi-Koi (Intermediate, 2 players)

Higo-Bana (Intermediate, 2-7 players)

Tensho, simplified (Intermediate, 2 players)

Go-Stop (Expert, 2-7 players)

Hachi-Hachi (Expert, 2-7 players)

Sudaoshi (Expert, 3 players)

Hachi, simplified (Expert, 2 players)

Hachi (Expert, 2 players)

Tensho (Expert, 2 players)

Sequence Games involve playing cards from your hand in sequential order with the objective of emptying your hand.

Poka (Beginner, 2 players)

Hiyoko, simplified (Beginner, 2-4 players)

Isuri, simplified (Beginner, 2-3 players)

Kage (Beginner, 2 players)

Hiyoko (Intermediate, 2-4 players)

Isuri (Intermediate, 2-3 players)

Luck Games are simple, fast-paced, gambling-oriented games. Many of the games in this section were traditionally played with Kabufuda decks.

Sutda, simplified (Beginner, 2-10 players)

Hiki-Kabu (Beginner, 2-10 players)

Oicho-Kabu (Beginner, 2-10 players)

Kyo-Kabu (Beginner, 2-10 players)

Kingo (Beginner, 2-10 players)

Sota (Intermediate, 2-6 players)

Sutda (Intermediate, 2-10 players)

Fusion Games are a collection of Western-inspired games that we reinterpreted and designed for gameplay with a Hanafuda deck. These games provide a familiar platform for Western players to become more comfortable with the Hanafuda deck.